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Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39183144

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Emergency transfusion may require the availability of O-negative red blood cell concentrates without pre-transfusion testing. At the Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, the emergency department was used to having access to two decentralized O-negative red blood cell concentrates. This study aims to analyze the consumption of O-negative red blood cell concentrates in emergency situations both before and after the implementation of a novel strategy aiming at optimizing stocks. This strategy provides a combined allocation of one unit of O-positive red blood cell concentrate and one unit of O-negative red blood cell concentrate decentralized in the emergency department and reserve the transfusion of the negative unit only to under 45-year-old women and under 20-year-old men. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted of the transfusion and medical records of all patients who received immediate transfusions in the emergency department without pre-transfusion testing between 2008 and 2022. RESULTS: A total of 193 patients received O red blood cell concentrates without pre-transfusion testing in emergency situations between 2008 and 2022. During the first 24 h of hospitalization, 354 O-negative units were transfused. Mean ratios of number of O-negative bags between 2008 and 2020 was 1.98 unit/patient. After implementation of the new strategy, the ratio in 2021 was 1.46 unit/patient and drastically decreased in 2022 to 0.79 unit/patient. CONCLUSION: In situations of emergency, allocating O-negative units only for women younger than 45 years and men younger than 20 years could have saved 85% of O-negative red blood cell concentrates transfused (303/354) yet balancing the immunological risk. Limiting the number of delocalized units of O-negative red blood cell concentrates in the emergency department seems to lower O-negative consumption. With this strategy, the units spared could have been transfused to patients with greater needs (e.g., sickle cell patients or chronically transfused patients).

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